Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Presidenti­al Candidates should suggest innovative solutions to energy crisis

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Presidenti­al candidates must put forward innovative solutions to our crippling energy crisis, says former Minister Milinda Moragoda in his statement issued to the Media.

He said in his statement, “The catastroph­ic state of the power and energy sector of this country, especially regarding electricit­y generation and distributi­on, makes it imperative that every individual seeking to aspire to the office of the Presidency should provide a clear vision and policy on this critical issue. The corruption and vested interests that dominate Sri Lanka’s energy sector are such that it requires disruptive solutions that are out of the box and forward thinking. In the first instance, as India has done recently, firm target dates should be set for the introducti­on of electric mobility to the country. The timeline set by the Indian Government, for example, is as follows:

Only electric threewheel­ers will be operating by 2023 and only electric two-wheelers by 2025. 30% of cars to be electrical­ly powered by 2030.

Given the above, it is not unreasonab­le for Sri Lanka to seek to adopt the same time line as India. In fact, in Norway, electric cars accounted for 50% of last year’s total car sales and a total phase-out of combustion vehicles in the country is planned for by 2025.

Secondly, non-negotiable deadlines should be set for Sri Lanka to move towards solar and other alternate energy solutions. Every other nation in the world is moving rapidly in this direction, while we are being left far behind. As is the internatio­nal practice, private investment should be the engine that drives the alternativ­e energy sector. Government should limit its role to acting as facilitato­r, catalyst, regulator and protector of the consumer.

With the Presidenti­al and Parliament­ary elections now on the horizon, the privatesec­tor, civil society and the public at large, should push candidates to come forward and commit to innovative solutions to our energy crisis. It is not unusual for vested interests to push their parochial agendas during the election period in order to capture politician­s at a time when they are the most vulnerable. The billions of dollars that have been lost to our economy as a result of mismanagem­ent of the energy sector by successive government­s, will justify any short-term investment cost that could be attributed to an accelerate­d plan to rapidly transfer Sri Lanka’s energy sector into renewables.

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